Braxton Miller's injury complicates Ohio State's mission

Jay LaPrete / Associated Press

Ohio State quarterback Braxton Miller will miss the entire 2014 season after suffering a shoulder injury in practice Monday. Are the Buckeyes capable of contending for the Big Ten title without Miller?

Ohio State quarterback Braxton Miller will miss the entire 2014 season after suffering a shoulder injury in practice Monday. Are the Buckeyes capable of contending for the Big Ten title without Miller? (Jay LaPrete / Associated Press)

A season-ending injury to quarterback Braxton Miller in August was always the nightmare scenario for Ohio State and any college football analyst in the midst of a daily poll rollout.

We'll just have to have to Buck-eye up, affix the appropriate disclaimers and soldier on.

One Las Vegas bookmaker immediately downgraded Ohio State's national title odds from 10-1 to 40-1, but the Buckeyes weren't going to win it all anyway. However, Miller was the catalyst in Ohio State's hopes of reaching this season's four-team playoff.

He is a three-year starter who last season accounted for 3,162 total yards and 36 touchdowns in leading the Buckeyes to a 12-2 record.

He was the reason Coach Urban Meyer said only days ago, "it does have the feel of a good team," even though Ohio State is replacing four starters along the offensive line.

Miller had surgery on his throwing shoulder in February after injuring it during last season's Orange Bowl loss to Clemson. Recovery was reportedly on schedule even though Miller complained in recent days of shoulder soreness and fatigue.

Ohio State Coach Urban Meyer looks on during a team practice session on Aug. 9.

Ohio State Coach Urban Meyer looks on during a team practice session on Aug. 9. (Jay LaPrete / Associated Press)

Ohio State fans must now familiarize themselves with backup quarterbacks J.T. Barrett and Cardale Jones.

Barrett, a highly touted dual-threat freshman from Texas, reportedly has the edge over Jones. Barrett is a relative no-name, but this time last year how many people knew about Jameis Winston? Or Johnny Manziel two summers ago?

The sky won't crash, because Meyer is a top-shelf coach and the schedule is padded with seven games Ohio State could win with almost any quarterback.

The team's home schedule has Kent State, Cincinnati, Rutgers, Illinois and Indiana. A neutral site opener at Navy, in Baltimore, is still a very winnable game, as is the game at Maryland on Oct. 4.

The mystery is how many victories can be plucked from the remaining five — Virginia Tech, Penn State, Michigan State, Minnesota and the rival known as "that team up north" — Michigan.

Any injury to a key player this late in August blows up the preseason polls.

Ohio State opened at No. 6 in the USA Today coaches' poll and at No. 5 in the Associated Press media poll. Uncertainty now creates a gooey spot in the heart of the top 10 and immediately improves the forecast for Michigan State.

This isn't the first injury to wreck a poll, and you never know when they'll strike. Oregon, in 2007, appeared poised for a championship run until star quarterback Dennis Dixon suffered a season-ending knee injury. The Ducks stumbled to a 9-4 finish.

That opened a passing lane for Louisiana State to become the only two-loss champion of the Bowl Championship Series era.

People in Baton Rouge loved it, and not many of them sent Oregon flowers.